Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
June 2022
The Indian Institute of head and neck oncology, a charitable Cancer Centre under the Indore Cancer foundation, continued to offer treatment during the Covid pandemic. 44 head and neck cancer patients who underwent surgery with adjuvant radiotherapy and 43 head and neck cancer patients who underwent only radiotherapy as the primary line of treatment from March 2020 to May 2021, were selected for the purpose of this study. Patients who underwent treatment for head and neck cancer either by radiotherapy or by surgery followed by post-operative radiotherapy were analysed to evaluate quality of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
December 2021
165 surgeries for head and neck cancer have been performed by a team of the Indian Institute of Head and Neck Oncology IIHNO in 1 year. Integration of private players was necessitated because of need to share available facilities without losing objective of reducing the cost. These surgeries were performed at a private hospital using their resources for the operation theatre and post-operative intensive care services, since the IIHNO does not as yet have an operation theatre facility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty-two Head and Neck cancer patients were operated by surgical team of the Indian Institute of Head and Neck Oncology (IIHNO) in a period ranging from May 2020 to the first week of December 2020. Surgical procedures ranged from surgery for tongue cancer, resection of cancers of the oral mucosa/cheek (with or without reconstruction), as well as surgery for paranasal cancers and thyroid cancers, with an average duration of 3 h for the procedures. This article reviews this experience during the peak of covid pandemic regarding the approaches adopted by the team of the IIHNO, a flagship project of the Indore Cancer Foundation, a public charitable trust.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
March 2019
Cancer is a difficult disease to treat particularly in low socioeconomic strata. There are three major challenges: that of early detection, of affordability and easy accessibility to specialised health care. The complexity of health care delivery, lack of structured grassroots level training program for early cancer detection, the shortage of well-equipped hospitals compounds the challenge of detecting as well as treating cancer in village based India.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCouple of decades ago, Palliative Mastectomy for locally advanced breast cancers was common, if not frequent surgical procedure in the surgical armamentarium. The advent of better understanding of tumor biology and better multidisciplinary management has certainly narrowed down its role. However there are situations where it is still a potent option.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPalliative care is an essential component of health care delivery. With respect to India, currently, despite rapid socio economic development, there are tremendous challenges in offering institutional palliative care due to several factors. A major factor has been an acute shortage of trained palliative care professionals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective Of The Study: To see the different age groups, gender, sites, disease stage, treatment outcome of various oral cavity sites carcinoma by combined modalities and the overall treatment duration.
Materials And Methods: A total of 212 oral cavity carcinoma patients (169 males and 43 females) with complete records (from September 2009 to December 2012) were analyzed for age, sex, histopathology, associated medical illnesses, various subsites with disease stage, various treatment modalities with the duration and follow-up records for disease control as well as disease failure at local, nodal, local + nodal, and distant metastasis.
Results: The most common site in oral cavity cancer was buccal mucosa 81 (38.